Modern Japan (Shinzõ Abe)
UA: Land of the import: Luxury resources (that you do not own*) acquired via
trading provide an additional +2
global happiness, and +2%
production in every city (max +10%
production per city;
happiness is uncapped)
UU: Factory Ship*** (replaces the workboat):
A factory ship only costs 75% of the production of a normal Work Boat. May capture sea-resources to provide
production in the nearest city**.
A diplomatic penalty is applied if the resource is five or less tiles away from another civilization or city state (and is not within your borders. They don't care if you destroy the environment within your own borders).
This diplomatic penalty is
global if the resource is banned by the World Congress (This penalty is also applied if you do it within your borders! Civs do care now since it's a global issue!).
Captured resources are permanently removed from the map and a factory ship is consumed
after having captured a resource twice.
UB: Car Factory (replaces the factory): In addition to the normal bonuses of a factory, the Car Factory also provides +10%
production towards trade units. Furthermore, it also provides +10%
production to Armoured units (they require car-stuff (engines, wheels, etc.) as well!) during
war.
(Limiting the trade-production to Caravans would be more logical, though it wouldn't really fit since Japan is an island-based nation. Let's just say Japan's cargo ships are amphibious vehicles
)
*E.g. If you haven't improved your furs yet, then trade so you get furs from another civ, and then improve your furs, the UA does not apply
**Production is applied in the same way as chopping down forests/jungles.
***turns out this is an actual term:
"A factory ship, also known as a fish processing vessel, is a large ocean-going vessel with extensive on-board facilities for processing and freezing caught fish or whales. Modern factory ships are automated and enlarged versions of the earlier whalers and their use for fishing has grown dramatically. Some factory ships are equipped to serve as a mother ship." -Wikipedia